Hey Marko,

Thanks for this article. This is something which is interesting me for quite 
some time.
It's sad that he did not mention systems like Max or Pure Data in his article 
since those are largely known environments that already have a good amount of 
matureness.
Lately I was programming in Max/MSP (the commercial version of the Max 
language) and what I really enjoyed was being able to switch between a view 
that is normally presented to the user aka. presentation view and programming 
view aka. patching view. At the first glance this seems like a very simple idea 
but if you have seen good examples of some patches / programs then you will 
love it. You click to open the patching view and get not only all the 
connections and hidden elements but also a fair amount of documentation in form 
of text.
Further in Max/MSP there are help views you can invoke directly on the desired 
subprogram / patcher. Those views itself are again just programs with a good 
amount of textual explanation. The good thing there is that the textual 
documentation goes along with a functional example you can again inspect.
This kind of documentation availability built into the programming environment 
is really cool and feels totally natural.


Best
Conrad



On Monday, 25 February 2013 (week 9) at 6:30 PM, Roeder, Marko wrote:

> Hey guys,
> 
> Since Flow-based Programming has also been a topic in Lively Kernel, I though 
> I should share a link I came across:
> 
> http://architects.dzone.com/articles/flow-based-programming-user
> 
> And of course, if anyone of you has any thoughts on that, I would really like 
> to here them (and I think all the others on this list too).
> 
> Best
> 
> - Marko 
> 
> 
> Attachments: 
> - smime.p7s
> 
> - ATT00001.txt
> 



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